The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Unborn babies able to recognise mum’s touch

Dundee researcher­s found foetuses ‘reached out’ to their mother

- STewarT alexander

Babies might be able to recognise their mother’s touch while still in the womb, according to research carried out at Dundee University.

Psychology researcher­s were able to record the reaction of unborn children still in utero using a special 4D ultrasound video.

They discovered babies were more likely to “reach out” and touch their mother’s uterus wall when the mother caressed her bump, more so than when others did.

Researcher­s believe it could explain why a mother feels her child moving in the womb when she touches her bump, only for the movement to stop when the father or friend reaches out.

Lead author of the report, Viola Marx, said: “Mothers spontaneou­sly and also intentiona­lly touch their abdomen during pregnancy, often with the intention to communicat­e with the foetus.”

“We showed that the foetuses responded to the mother’s touching of her abdomen. Any stimulatio­n can be beneficial to the developmen­t of the foetus and the bonding of the mother, father and the foetus.

“Previous research has shown unborn babies also respond when their mother talks to them, helping them learn to recognise her voice after birth. Touch during pregnancy may also play a similar role.

“This familiarit­y between baby and mother is most likely due to the engagement of the mother with the developing foetus during pregnancy.

“The mother’s touch is accompanie­d by the movement of her whole body. It could also be the style of touch and the familiarit­y of the touch.”

Study co-author Dr Emese Nagy said more research should be carried out in order to understand this phenomenon better.

She said: “It is possible that fathers worry about hurting the mother and child and touch too gently as a result, while the stranger tends to copy what the mother did herself.

“It may be that babies are able to recognise their own mother’s touch in a number of ways but we need to carry out more research to understand this better.

“Further work is also needed to understand the ‘meaning’ of the behaviour of the foetus in response to touch and its relationsh­ip to the bonding of the mother and her unborn child.”

 ??  ?? Communicat­ion with your baby starts while still in the womb, below, long before it is born.
Communicat­ion with your baby starts while still in the womb, below, long before it is born.
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 ??  ?? Viola Marx, lead author of the Dundee University report.
Viola Marx, lead author of the Dundee University report.

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